Phoenix 2772

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Phoenix 2772

Cover of the Japanese VHS release
Directed by Taku Sugiyama
Written by Taku Sugiyama
Osamu Tezuka
Starring Kaneto Shiozawa
Keiko Takeshita
Music by Yasuo Higuchi
Editing by Kazuo Inōe
Masashi Furukawa
Distributed by Flag of Japan Toho
Flag of the United States Celebrity Video
Flag of AustraliaFlag of New Zealand Madman Entertainment
Release date(s) Flag of Japan March 15, 1980
Flag of the United States July 13, 1982
Running time 122 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Phoenix 2772 (火の鳥2772 愛のコスモゾーン Hi no Tori 2772: Ai no Kosumozōn?, lit. Firebird 2772: Love's Cosmozone) is an animated feature film directed by Taku Sugiyama and co-scripted by Osamu Tezuka, based on his manga series Hi no Tori.

The science fiction film premiered on March 15, 1980 in Japan.

Contents

[edit] Story

Phoenix 2772 is set in the distant future where the planet Earth is dying from a lack of energy resources and a disheartening political climate sees all human beings produced by computer to live out certain social roles, the colour of the eyes determining the baby's rank, from pilot to politician, etc. Godo is one such child brought up to be a cadet and nursed by the beautiful robot-maid Orga. After noticing his exceptional abilities, Rock, a dictatorial candidate for priminister, selects Godo to fulfill his agenda and travel into deep space and capture the mystical phoenix, its blood will manifestly heal the Earth (and selfishly make Rock priminister). This eventually proves hard for Godo for many reasons, partly because he has a love of all living creatures and detests his being trained as what appears to be a ruthless hunter. He is also to leave his one friend in his adolescence Orga to deletion. Most importantly he elopes with Rena, a "daughter of the elite" and bride-to-be of Rock when it is forbidden for his rank to communicate with such a woman.

For his crime Godo loses his citizenship and is sent to a labour camp in iceland where mining energy from the Earth's core is being harnessed in a bid to save the world (but adversely causing earthquakes and speeding up the process). While interned and heart-broken over losing Rena he meets Doctor Saruta, a prison professor who wishes to councel the young pilot, only to secretly plot with him a plan to escape, search for the phoenix themselves and save the Earth. Eventually Godo is saved by Orga and Pincho (a pet creature of Rena that had helped the lost Orga), and they set into space.

During various displays of then-groundbreaking animation, Godo and the crew of the ship find it almost impossible to subdue the phoenix and it changes into many monstrous shapes and sizes, from dragons to tenticular leeches. After learning that Rena is to marry Rock, Godo had become stricken with misery and pushes away Orga's advances when she shows signs of love (and previously jealousy) for Godo. With the crew all killed one-by-one by the phoenix and the secret of its weakness lost in Saruta's last words the phoenix finally destroys Orga by burning her to death, and Godo finally surrenders. As he cradles Orga realizing how selfish he had been towards his only friend in the world the phoenix is subdued by the power of love and thus enters on board the ship in the form of what appears the cross between an angel and a peacock.

Amazed at Godo's love of living creatures the phoenix speaking with a female voice "herself" falls in love with Godo and grants his wish of reviving Orga on the condition she gives him anything she wants of him (not knowing that this involves his carnal love and the phoenix possessing the body of Orga to obtain this). After being reunited with Orga and given a paradisal planet to live on, Godo still has feelings towards the dying Earth and sets out to return with vegetables and resources, only to be met with Rock (and a now content and promiscuous Rena) and is arrested. But what follows is a series of earthquakes that level the world and bring about final destruction, Rena dying in the advent by trying to escape on Godo's ship and Rock blinded by a lava emission. Godo gives Rock his last rights and he and Orga appear as lone survivors, he then grieves that so much life has been destroyed.

The phoenix reveals it self to Godo through Orga and requests his wish to lay down his life for the revival of the Earth and its creatures. After the sombre night changes to a starry dawn and after Godo's death the casualities are resurrected. Orga then lays Godo's corpse on the shore and is freed of the phoenix, only to have her own dead-body (beside Godo's) change into a human being. Godo himself is changed into a newborn baby again and, claimed by the new human Orga as a kind of virgin birth, is deified as a god.

Beyond Osamu Tezuka's style as a fantastic humanist writer the film had a curious legacy as a deposit of western animation influences, coupled with a beautiful score by Yasuo Higuchi these can be seen with the prison mining set of unisen minors (Fleischer Studios), Pincho and other creatures dancing with a mop (Disney's Fantasia) and the reference to Pinochio when Olga is given new life. But most importantly the film had a flare of eastern mystical philosophy that was not (and is still not) understood by the west, which involves a likeness to Hindu fairytale fancy and especially Buddhism. With Godo's plight intimated as poor rebirth karma compared to his antithesis Rokk, the phoenix as symbol of rebirth and immortality, and also the final apotheosis of Godo and Tezuka's love of animal freedom are also evident Buddhist ideals.

Many of the characters themselves appear in other manga of Tezuka's in the past and at least one of these can be considered a reincarnation. Fans of Tezuka will find Saruta, Ban, Higeoyagi, Boon and Rock in other stories of Tezuka (the latter for instance is the evil assassin in Tezuka's modern epic Metropolis). Black Jack however, who is the warden of the iceland prison camp in Phoenix 2772, was ambiguously taken from Tezuka's popular manga series Black Jack as the otherwise heroic and macarbre surgeon.

[edit] Characters

See also: Osamu Tezuka's Star System

Godo

  • Godo; pilot.

Olga

  • Olga; female robot, Godo's caretaker.

Rock

  • Rock; political leader and chief science officer.

Rena

  • Rena; daughter of Lord Eat.

Lord Eat

  • Lord Eat; political leader, chief of elders.

Borukan

  • Borukan; a supervisor and trainer of pilots.

Shunsaku Ban/Higeoyaji

  • Ban, or Higeoyaji; resident of the planet Tears.

Black Jack

  • Black Jack; warden at Iceland labour camp prison.

Dr. Saruta

  • Dr. Saruta; prisoner at Iceland labour camp prison.

Boon

  • Boon; prison guard at Iceland labour camp prison.

Pincho

  • Pincho; an alien servant of Rena.

Crack

  • Crack; an alien resident of the planet Tears.

The Phoenix

  • The Phoenix; the mythical bird of legend.

[edit] Awards and nominations

The film won the Inkpot Award at the 1980 San Diego Comic Convention and the Animation Award at the 1980 Las Vegas Film Festival. It was a Best Animated Film nominee at the 1983 Saturn Awards.

[edit] External links

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